I'm surprised that no one seems this as a win/win.
Depends entirely on how they implement it.
But to whom and how are you going to pitch these devices?
The intent, as I see it, is for HTC to develop phones that they can load either Android or Windows Phone. I'm sure the development community will figure out how to load one or the other, but the real win here is that with minimal effort HTC can release hardware that will appeal to both Android and WP users. Sure, the latter is a smaller camp, but if they can do it with minimal effort, why not? Better than designing a whole separate phone like the 8x that's actually well-engineered and then have it not sell.
I thought HTC already had a couple of devices running Android or WP on the same hardware (or pretty much the same) but under different model names.
What's funny is while Microsoft is trying to work with HTC to put Windows on Android phones, Nokia is trying to get HTC Android phones banned for a patent violation. Haha.![]()
I thought HTC already had a couple of devices running Android or WP on the same hardware (or pretty much the same) but under different model names.
Because it's not.I'm surprised that no one seems this as a win/win.
It's all a part of the plan to put pressure on HTC to accept this agreement.What's funny is while Microsoft is trying to work with HTC to put Windows on Android phones, Nokia is trying to get HTC Android phones banned for a patent violation. Haha.![]()